7 — Naagin

Aarav’s birthmark burns. He remembers his past life—and this time, he chooses differently. He kisses her forehead, says, “Then let’s both turn to stone together.”

Deep beneath the polluted waters of the Arabian Sea, the ruins of an ancient Nagavanshi temple pulse with faint blue light. Inside a glass coffin encrusted with barnacles lies Devika (28, fierce, with tired eyes that hide millennia of rage). She has been in *samochan—*a voluntary death-sleep—for 300 years.

At the submerged temple, with the blood moon overhead, Bhairav stabs Aarav to extract his “cursed blood” for the weapon. Devika has a choice: save Aarav and let the curse turn her to stone forever, or take Bhairav’s deal (her mani in exchange for Aarav’s life and a cure for her sisters). naagin 7

On the surface, a corrupt real estate tycoon, Bhairav Singh Rathore , dynamites the seabed to build an illegal underwater casino. The explosion shatters the glass. Devika’s eyes snap open. She rises through the wreckage, her lower body coiling into a magnificent white serpent tail. She doesn’t attack. She weeps. Because waking up means the curse has reached its final stage.

The curse breaks not through revenge or sacrifice, but through mutual acceptance . The moonlight turns silver. Every frozen Naagin statue cracks—and inside, hearts begin to beat again. Aarav’s birthmark burns

Meanwhile, the blood moon rises in 13 days. Every night, Devika’s feet grow heavier, her skin flakes like limestone. She hides this from Aarav.

Aarav enters with chai. “Someone’s at the gate. Says she’s from the eighth generation.” Inside a glass coffin encrusted with barnacles lies

But there’s a second twist: Bhairav Singh Rathore isn’t just a greedy builder. He’s an Ichchadhari Nagaraja (male serpent king) who betrayed his own kind centuries ago to gain immortality. He has been hunting Naagins ever since, harvesting their mani to power a weapon that will eliminate all shape-shifters except himself. Devika’s mani —cracked but pure—is the last one he needs.